Talk
about shooting yourself in the foot. Just one day after he unveiled a harsh Arizona-style immigration proposal for Florida,
Attorney General Bill McCollum was obliged to backpedal, conceding a need to consult with ``my supporters in the Hispanic
community'' about the provisions in his punitive and potentially unconstitutional measure.
That came after U.S. Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a co-chair of Mr. McCollum's
Hispanic leadership team in his race for governor, pronounced herself ``blindsided'' and ``disappointed.'' Other prominent
Hispanic Republicans backed away from the proposal, as well, and at least one well-known fundraiser declared she would ``not
lift a finger or raise one additional dollar'' for his campaign.
Needs
to reconsider If Mr. McCollum, whom The Miami
Herald's Editorial Board recommends in the Republican primary, thinks this is the way to seize the initiative on a hot-button
issue away from mega-bucks challenger Rick Scott, he needs to think again. A Mason-Dixon poll of likely voters shows Mr. McCollum
well ahead of Mr. Scott in the Hispanic community (57 to 21 percent). But if the attorney general insists on alienating his
own voters by pandering to the xenophobic elements in his party, Mr. Scott will be the beneficiary.Undoubtedly,
illegal immigration is an important issue. Floridians want smart and effective law enforcement. But a look at Florida's situation
makes clear that creating an Arizona-style law for this state is wrong.
Florida is not Arizona -- we do not share a border with Mexico. Further, the state's biggest Hispanic
populations, Cubans and Puerto Ricans, are legal. Also important: The number of illegal immigrants in Florida, according to
statistics from the Department of Homeland Security, is on the way down. Rep. Ros-Lehtinen is exactly right: ``Obsessing about
this issue in the gubernatorial campaign means other issues are getting short shrift.''
Anti-incumbent fervor Issues
such as job creation, growth management, teacher pay, classroom size, how to pay for exploding Medicaid caseloads, Florida's
topsy-turvy taxation system, the chronic shortfall in revenue and many others. Mr. Scott has managed to muscle his way into
the campaign by spending a river of dollars, mouthing whatever soundbite can attract votes to pander to the anti-incumbent
crowd.Legislation should be driven by facts, not by emotion and politicking. The larger problem
is the ability of deep-pocket candidates like Mr. Scott in the Republican primary and Jeff Greene in the Democratic primary
for U.S. Senate to manufacture phony issues just to attract attention -- and votes.
Before taking the bait, voters should consider what's best for Florida.
Injecting controversy into campaigns can make for entertaining politics, but it rarely produces sound policies. Bill McCollum,
a veteran public official, should have learned that long ago.